Main article

Andi Pratama Wijaya
Department of Informatics Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Diponegoro, Semarang 50275, Indonesia
Siti Nurhaliza Putri*
Faculty of Computer Science, Universitas Brawijaya, Malang 65145, Indonesia
siti.putri@ub.ac.id
Budi Santoso Hidayat
Department of Information Systems, Faculty of Information Technology and Data Science, Universitas Sebelas Maret, Surakarta 57126, Indonesia

DOI: https://doi.org/10.63646/datamind.2024.020404

Abstract

Blockchain technology has evolved from a single-purpose payment ledger into a general-purpose distributed-systems infrastructure that now underpins decentralized finance, supply chain monitoring, healthcare data exchange, energy markets, education credentialing, and Internet of Things (IoT) coordination. Despite this momentum, applied researchers face a fragmented picture: published surveys frequently bundle architectural primitives, consensus mechanisms, and application case studies without providing a structured, quantitative view of how the technology is actually used across domains, or of how decentralized real platforms are when assessed with explicit metrics. This article addresses that gap. It synthesizes the architectural foundations of blockchain systems, classifies the principal consensus mechanisms into proof-based and voting-based families, surveys eight application domains with concrete deployment examples, and analyses the distribution of recent research output across these domains. We also evaluate decentralization quantitatively using the Nakamoto coefficient across nine major platforms, highlighting that headline market capitalization is a poor predictor of effective decentralization. The discussion translates these results into design guidance: practitioners should select a consensus family on the basis of the trust assumptions of the target deployment, treat scalability and energy consumption as first-order constraints rather than tunables, and use decentralization metrics as part of the platform-selection workflow rather than as a marketing aftertho

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How to Cite

Wijaya, A. P., Putri, S. N., & Hidayat3, B. S. (2024). A Data-Driven Survey of Blockchain Technology: Architecture, Consensus Mechanisms, Cross-Domain Applications, and Decentralization Metrics. DATAMIND, 2(4), 33-48. https://doi.org/10.63646/datamind.2024.020404